No Trophies Needed
An Actors Rejection of Industrial Pats On The Back

They offer me gold on a velvet tray;
a polished lie, a numbered praise,
a statue stiff with borrowed light,
as if art could be weighed, or ranked, or won
on a single, glittering night.
Yet, I am not here for their applause
measured in ballots and broadcast smiles.
I did not cross this crooked road
to beg approval from a room
that forgets by morning who it crowned.
Let them clap each other on the back,
pass the chalice, toast the chosen few;
I’ve seen the seams beneath the silk,
heard the hollow in the echoing cheer.
A trophy is only as heavy
as the hands that need it.
No.
My prize is not cast in bronze.
My prize is the silence
just before a line lands.
That breathless, sacred second
when an audience leans forward
without knowing why.
My prize is the laugh that breaks
like thunder in the cheap seats,
the tear wiped quickly in the dark,
the stranger who walks out changed;
even slightly
(or even secretly).
My prize is the contract signed,
the work done honest,
the check that says:
You gave something real,
and it was worth something back.
My prize is culture
(forwarded, fractured, reborn)
a ripple in the long river of story
that outlives every red carpet
and every name engraved in gold.
What is a statue
to a soul set on fire?
Look to the ghosts I walk beside.
Robert Shaw with a voice like a storm at sea,
Peter O’Toole blazing in desert suns,
Steve McQueen all grit and quiet thunder,
Johnny Depp dancing on the edge of strange,
Willem Dafoe with eyes that see too much.
Men who carved their names
not into trophies,
but into time.
They did not need a pedestal.
They became the standard.
So keep your ceremonies,
your envelopes, your careful hierarchies.
I will be elsewhere:
On a stage, in a frame, in a moment
that cannot be judged by committee.
I do not act
to be declared the best.
I act
because something in me refuses
to be anything less than alive.
And that;
that is an award
no one can hand me,
and no one can take away.
About the Creator
Jacob Herr
Born & raised in the American heartland, Jacob Herr graduated from Butler University with a dual degree in theatre & history. He is a rough, tumble, and humble artist, known to write about a little bit of everything.


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